Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1534: How to Overcome an Exercise Sticking Point, the Best Kettlebell Exercises to Compliment Barbell Training, How to Train Post Pregnancy & More (Listener Live Coaching)
Episode Date: April 17, 2021In this episode of Quah (Q & A), Sal, Adam & Justin answer Pump Head questions from five listeners via Zoom. Justin caught flexing. (4:18) Mind Pump’s latest obsession, the ‘Viking Press’. (7:1...5) Which states have the highest/lowest IQ? (10:44) Education versus experience/starting a career. (13:51) The Public Goods mission of bringing safe/environmentally friendly products to the general population. (24:42) Mind Pump Investments: Uber’s next BIG move. (27:15) Mind Pump Debates: The zealots on both sides of the government-mandated vaccine requirement argument. (29:38) Don’t call it a comeback, Domino’s is launching autonomous pizza delivery. (38:42) You don’t “skitch” bro?! (40:25) The value of NCI is a no-brainer! (42:07) #Quah question #1 – How can I implement more kettlebell exercises to complement my barbell training? (47:05) #Quah question #2 – What is the best programming option to start with post-pregnancy? (56:34) #Quah question #3 – Recommendations on nutrition during Ramadan? (1:07:19) #Quah question #4 – What program can I follow to complement my Olympic lifting training to overcome an exercise sticking point? (1:15:53) #Quah question #5 – How can I get a handle on my diet with a family and busy work life? (1:24:20) Related Links/Products Mentioned April Specials: MAPS Anabolic or Shredded Summer Bundle 50% off! **Promo code “APRILSPECIAL” at checkout** Average IQ by State 2021 - World Population Review Your Next Five Moves: Master the Art of Business Strategy Visit Public Goods for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Receive $15 off your first Public Goods order with NO MINIMUM purchase** Count Down: How Our Modern World Is Threatening Sperm Counts, Altering Male and Female Reproductive Development, and Imperiling the Future of the Human Race Uber CEO Says Company Might Get Into Cannabis Delivery Business If Federal Laws Change J&J coronavirus vaccine pause hurts its reputation Only the VACCINATED will be saved? Confusion after St. Vincent PM says only those with Covid jab can flee VOLCANO on cruise ships Domino's is launching autonomous pizza delivery with a tiny self-driving car Skitching - Wikipedia Skitchin' - Wikipedia NCI Certifications x Mind Pump Mind Pump #1492: Five Things To Look For In An Online Coach With Jason Phillips How to do a Proper Kettlebell Swing (Don't Make THIS Mistake!!) How To Overhead Press with Kettlebells | Mind Pump Kettlebells For Aesthetics - Mind Pump Media How To Do A Kettlebell Half Kneeling Windmill Press | FREE Shoulder Growth Guide Enter the Kettlebell!: Strength Secret of the Soviet Supermen MAPS Starter | MAPS Fitness Products - Mind Pump Media How Should You Approach Your Postpartum Fitness? - Mind Pump Blog MAPS Prime Pro Webinar Ramadan - Wikipedia MAPS Fitness Prime Pro - Mind Pump Media Mind Pump #1240: The Muscle Building & Fat Burning Effects Of Oly Lifting With Sonny Webster Build Your Core Strength with the Hollow Body Tension Movement Mind Pump #1435: How To Kick Your Sugar Addiction In 5 Simple Steps Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Ben Pollack, Ph.D. (@phdeadlift) Instagram Jason Phillips (@jasonphillipsisnutrition) Instagram Sonny Webster (@sonnywebstergb) Instagram
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the world's number one fitness health and entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pump.
Alright, in today's episode, we answered live questions from listeners and viewers just like you.
So we actually coached people on air live.
That's the back half of the episode.
The front half of the episode is an intro portion
where we talk about current events.
We're being up scientific studies
and we talk about our sponsors.
Today's intro was 42 minutes long.
All right, this is what happened in today's podcast.
We open up by talking about Justin Flexing.
Oh yeah, he flexes all the time now
that he's getting super buff.
Usually you have to pay for that.
Then we talked about the Viking press,
one of our favorite pieces of equipment now.
I brought up an article that brought up
averages of IQ by state.
So when you listen to that part,
you might be surprised which state was in the bottom five.
You offended me with this.
Then we talked about education versus experience
or career, so that was a great conversation.
Then we talked about getting products
that don't have toxins, lots and lots of studies
coming out showing that the chemicals that we're exposed to
could be lowering testosterone,
increasing our risk of Parkinson's, and much more,
and the evidence is becoming overwhelming.
If you want to get toxin-free products that are inexpensive
and that are also friendly to the environment,
you gotta go check out public goods,
that's what they do.
And because you listen to Mind Pump,
you actually get a discount.
Go to publicgoods.com-flour-slash-mind-pump,
use the code Mind Pump at checkout
and get $15 off.
$15.. $15.
Your first order.
Then we talked about the Johnson and Johnson vaccine
putting on hold by the CDC.
Then we talked about the eruption at St. Vincent
and the cruise ships who only allowed certain people
on the ships.
Then we talked about Domino's pizza.
I guess they're delivering now with autonomous vehicles.
That's good, that's good stuff. And then we talked about Domino's Pizza. I guess they're delivering now with autonomous vehicles. That's good, that's good stuff.
And then we talked about Skitchen.
No, that's not-
We're bringing it back, so.
No, that's not an STD.
Let's go Skitchen.
That's right.
And then we talked about the interview that we did with NCI.
Now NCI is a certification course online for fitness professionals
who'd like to coach people online.
It's actually the best certification course that you'll find.
So if you're a trainer and you want to further your education or if you want to become a
trainer, go check them out and we have a massive hookup for you.
So go to ncicertifications.com-flour-slash-mind-pump and go check out their massive
Huge offer for mind pump listeners. Then we got into the questions the first question was from David from California
You want to know how to integrate kettlebell training into his barbell and dumbbell routine for better aesthetics and strength?
The next question this person wants to know how they should work out after having twins.
So they're having twins.
Congratulations.
I don't know what they should do after.
The next question was from Sam from Saudi Arabia.
This person wants to know about Ramadan, wants to know how they should change their training
and how they should approach their diet.
And the next question was from Maria from California.
This person wants to know how they can strengthen their core
for Olympic weightlifting.
And the final question is from Dan from Australia.
This person is 39, they got two kids, they're doing okay,
but they're kind of overeat sugar.
Would like some strategies on how to eat less of it
so they can get ripped just like Justin.
Also, this month we're running a huge promotion on one of our most
popular workout programs and one of our most popular workout program bundles. Both of them
great to help you get ready for the summer. So right now you can get maps and a ballac 50%
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So you get both of them half off go check them out go to maps fitness products calm and use the code
April special with no space for that discount
Is it just mirrors just in beefy right now?
I feel like that dude come on bro do a real flex always make fun here holy shit
He beefed out dude. He when he get putty. Do you put does he when he flexes like an athlete totally?
Yeah, yeah, what I watch you
I remember when we were I remember when we were doing like getting him all lead and shredded when we first started the podcast
And we're like practicing and he's like
My boy is so awkward right now.
But you know, hey, here's a deal.
Hey, pretend you're holding a helmet.
You know, I don't, a real talk though, real talk.
I hated that piece.
Posing?
Hated that piece.
Yeah.
And I had to do it a lot just to get as terrible as I am at it.
Like it is,
What you saw was Adam's practicing his ass off.
Yes, no, really, it's like dance moves.
Yeah, no, there's definitely an art.
My favorite part was when you would turn and you go,
yeah, you shake it up.
What is that, dude?
I don't know, you know what it is?
It's like you fart and you're like,
no, it's just like how an athlete walks up to the plate
to get ready for.
It's like a routine.
It's like you've trained and practiced
that it's the same thing.
Sometimes I really appreciate your sales skills.
Thank you.
No, like wow that makes sense.
No it is.
Yeah you do you have to ritualize it to get it because here's the thing you when you get
on stage you don't get a mirror.
So you practice it in front of the mirror a thousand times to get to that position to show
people that.
Now here's the thing though okay is does Justin really not know how to flex or does he
just pretend because I caught him once Adam
We were back there in the bathroom and I was gonna back and he didn't know that I was you know
crowd near me or that I was I was no he didn't know that I was on the toilet
Oh, he walks in and it's right when I'm up and I'm ready to open the door and I hear
Like I hear that from it. No, yes, dude lie and I caught him. Is he telling true? Yes, dude
Did you tell the truth? No, you literally this is literally what he said I hear and then he home
Go and he goes like this he goes something like they don't even know
I open the door.
I just say it.
I just say it.
I just say it.
I just say it.
I just say it.
I just say it.
I just say it.
I just say it.
I just say it.
I just say it.
I just say it.
I just say it.
I just say it.
I just say it.
I just say it.
I just say it.
I just say it.
I just say it.
I just say it.
I just say it. I just say it. I just say it. I just say it. I just say it. I just say it. Hey, you can't be I do check-ins you can't be that self-ic and not flex bro
He's not fake. He's
I don't talk to myself that that's a lie. You said something dude. It was like that. I was like I mean I
Just think about us bro, but we don't know
What a fucking asshole. No, you're doing good, bro.
I saw you moving.
You were moving hell away today.
What are you doing?
Overhead presses and shit.
Yeah, it's fun.
Show me, oh, these kids don't even know what kind of thing.
I love that thing, by the way.
It's my favorite.
The Viking press?
Yes.
What a wonderful, it's the best, you know, it's funny.
It's the silliest fucking thing, right?
It's a bar on the rack and whatever.
It's the best shoulder press machine,
I'll put in the category of machines.
Hands down, dude.
That I've ever used.
I mean, I like free weights, right?
So I like dumbbells and barbells, not so.
But like hammer strength, seated plate loadings.
So many things.
Any machine for shoulders, it's superior.
Just the angle of push, the way it
causes you to straighten your body out.
I love it. Yeah, you saw it first on our buddy, you've been public, right? He caused you to straighten your body out. I love it.
You saw it first on our buddy, Ben Pollock, right?
He was the one doing it.
God, I love that thing.
Yeah, and then he was explaining kind of like,
how to put it together.
Oh, that looks kind of cool.
You know, he told me that it made a huge difference
on his bench strength.
Really?
So he saw it.
I wonder if it's that full extension.
Of course.
And it's the angle.
It's like the angle that you're coming from right here
and you're pressing all the way up. And then you move your body forward. You put your body into it, which is what I love. That's the angle. It's like the angle that you're you're you're coming you're coming from right here and you're pressing all the way up
And then you put your body into it, which is what I love that's the part that I really appreciate
Yeah, no get that from a lot. Yeah, I she gives me the the fastest pump of almost any show
Yeah, you know, we haven't had a I haven't had a piece of equipment or an exercise or something that I was that excited
Mary the last thing I could think about was maybe when Justin got us doing windmills, I got pretty excited about that for a little bit.
Yeah, but this is more of like a bodybuilding different.
Yeah, like Justin introduced windmills to us up until that point, I had never trained them.
Almost sounds like he said windmills.
Huh? Meals.
Meals. Sounds like a nice windmills.
Yeah. I don't want any of your windmills.
Yeah, there's windmills.
But no, but I love the way it feels.
Now, I know that you can use, what's it called, the Viking press?
Right.
I think this is called, you can use that for other exercises, I guess.
But I don't like it for anything else.
Yeah, just like this.
That's the point.
Sometimes I nail it for one thing and then you see, and this is the problem with a lot of
exercise tools.
Like, it's like, there's something out there
where everybody has to make up exercises around it
just to sell it.
You know, it's like, that's not,
like you can't make everything a full body machine.
Yeah, I know, it does one thing really well.
Yeah, just so there's one thing really,
let's just stick with that.
Yeah, no, you know what you do?
You attach it to a barbell and then you put the other end
in the land line and then you see people doing exercise.
But here's why I don't like it.
First off, a T-Bar row. Yeah, as you say, T-Bar row might people doing exercise. Here's why I don't like it. First off, a T-bar row.
Yeah, as you say, T-bar row might work.
Either the, no, I don't like it that way.
It's not that great.
If I'm standing over the barbell,
the way that I want to when I do a T-bar row,
so the weight comes into me,
I can't do that with the Viking press
because now the weights are down here
and it's hitting my body.
It's stupid.
But if I stay away from the barbell,
now when I do the row because of the angle,
the bar moves away from me,
so now it becomes more biceps.
Does that make sense? So as I'm rowing, if I'm standing in front, the barbell, from me. So now it becomes more biceps. Does that make sense?
So as I'm rowing, if I'm staying in front,
the barbell, that's that way.
Yeah, no, that sounds stupid.
Because that way, it's more bicep flexion.
I don't wanna do that shit.
Yeah, yeah, no.
But the overhead press.
It's, you know, obviously,
gyms have been like kinda closed down
for the life of the last year.
So I wonder, when we first started the podcast,
I felt like we were in the thick of the trendy,
like, do weird shit on
machines. Yeah. Add rubber bands to it.
It's turned happening. Yeah, so I was wondering the same thing too.
Remember we used to hammer that pretty hard.
Go upside down a leg curl or where? Yeah, doing weird, weird exercises for every single
machine. I thought that was so funny. That's exactly right there.
No, the side chest presses my favorite and you're gonna make that face one.
What was that? Joey Swole, bro.
That's what he was responsible for that.
I don't know who did that first.
I don't know if someone saw him that,
but boy did he get everybody doing that.
Oh yeah.
It was a guaranteed giveaway if I walked in a gym.
Saw some 17 year old kid doing that.
I'm like, oh, you follow Joey Swole?
Yeah.
You're trying to.
We know your leader.
Yeah.
Hey, a little trivia question.
You guys want to guess on which states have the highest IQ
and which states cumulative, right?
So they do this cumulative IQ test or whatever averages.
What states have highest IQs and what states have
the lowest IQs?
Lowest and highest.
Yeah.
Okay, let me ask you this.
Wait, it's just gonna be tough to not insult people here.
So let me ask you this.
All right, here I'll make it a real random one. I'll make it easier. Okay, because we were in California, so we could we could
Speculate I don't think we have where do you think California ranks at the high near the highest or near the lowest?
No, I would I would actually pick well, I would think we'd be about the middle because we get all the Silicon Valley
You know brainiacs coming here, but we also have the largest discrepancy right in like incomes
Yeah, right? So you have and not to say that that's directly connected, but I'm sure there's some correlation
to that.
So I would think that there is a pretty even mix.
Yeah, because what you think with California is people think, oh, the beach or Silicon
Valley, such a small part of it.
But there's all central valley, there's all, this is huge amount of land.
And there's not a lot of money over there.
Oh, dude.
So California actually is in the bottom of the city.
I would have guessed the men out to look.
Now, this is crazy considering, you know,
you got some brilliant people that live in California.
So there must be such a small percentage.
A lot of idiots.
The balance is average.
You have to say,
well let's say, you got like, you know,
you got like the people who started, you know,
the tech revolution in California.
Elon Musk for, but here's the reason I know everybody
left all the small ones here.
Yeah, but here's the thing that was happening.
All the small ones left.
I mean, here's the thing though, that's a person, right?
Like, we think Elon Musk and you think of Steve Jobs,
that's one man who employed hundreds of thousands of people.
So like, you think of it as a company,
so you think like that, but it's really,
he's responsible for that.
He, by himself, is responsible for that.
That doesn't necessarily mean that the
hundred thousand people that work for him are brilliant.
So it's really not that many people that we're talking about,
you talk about these pretty easy.
So here's the bottom five, right?
So the last place is Mississippi
with an average IQ of 94.2.
Then 49th is Louisiana 95.3, then California 95.5
and then next Hawaii 95.6.
I would not have guessed it.
I would not have guessed it.
The number one state for average IQ is Massachusetts
at the 104.3 and then second is New Hampshire.
At a hundred and four.
A hundred and four words there.
I have no idea.
I don't know how to do it.
I don't know how to do it. I don't know how to do't know. I don't know. I don't know.
I don't know.
Maybe I can get it.
That's a good point.
Are they adding them in there?
Because that's not very fair.
And it's a smaller population.
Yeah.
Well, that's true.
And then do the averages.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's like it's all averages.
Yeah.
California is such a huge population.
It does.
We have a lot of people.
That's a really good point.
Are we including?
Are they like, do they go around?
Yeah. Texas is the second most popular state. It wasn't in the bottom five or whatever. I don't know Yeah, but it's have an Ivy League school and they're either though, could Texas
Doesn't have an Ivy League. They don't have an Ivy League. I don't think so. Where are the Ivy League schools?
Most are on these days, right?
This is where it all yeah a lot of really isn't Stanford. I consider Ivy League here in California
Pull up all the Ivy League so we
I guess you can ask in the two guys. We got a call sticker
We got one guy that went to college. Yeah, I'm so near dummies.
I had this conversation with Jessica's family because her sister-in-law is going through
nursing school.
She's actually crushing right now.
It's just pretty cool.
It's exciting.
But we were talking about education.
Yeah.
New York, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, and Island, New York, and I kept my shoes.
All the old schools, right?
And we were talking about education. And she said, did you have to go to Pennsylvania and New Hampshire and Island and New York and I can't miss shoots. All the old schools, right? And we were talking about education and she was,
Sal, did you go to college and said,
no, I can fact, I took one class.
She was like, wow, you only finished one class?
I said, no, no, no, literally one class.
I went in, sat down for one class, left, went back to the gym.
Yeah, this is it for me.
Yeah, I got a listen, this bullshit takes a minute.
I never asked you to come to go run the gym. That's it. Huh you really wouldn't want literally dude
I walked you guys know me bro. I first of all I love learning. It's not it's not a learning thing
I love learning that environment is so terrible. Yeah, but let me tell you something about you that I've learned from
From working with you. You love learning what the fuck you want to learn no
She have no desire to I don't give a shit how important it is if it is not fuck you want to learn. No, she doesn't. You have no desire to, I don't give a shit,
how important it is if it is not what you want to learn.
Absolutely.
But if it is something you want to learn,
you'll go deeper than anybody I know.
That's true.
No, that's true.
Again, it's like getting it.
Balls deep.
And hell of deep.
But I mean, that's that environment doesn't work for me
because I'm not interested in this.
This is not interesting.
And you're sitting in this classroom,
listening to the person, take your notes, do this,
whatever, I'll get the fuck out of here.
I can do that.
So.
Yeah, I lasted, I lasted two years.
So I went through, I almost got my A.
I was, I was, I think, 13 units
somewhere around there shortly.
Yeah, so it was close.
That my, the thing, the kicker for me
that made me stop was when we moved to her when I moved I moved to San Jose
To come in move with my grandma the idea was this because I was I was kind of paying my own my own weight everything at that time
And it was hard, you know being a 17 year old kid and paying rent car stuff and paying for school and and then and working
You know a full-time job by doing all that my grandma
I knew that I could go move in with her.
She had an apartment to bedroom,
and she would rent for like 300 bucks to me in the Bay Area,
which is next to nothing, right?
And I'd be able to eat with her.
So really low bills, I wouldn't have to work much,
and then I could just grind on school.
And so when I moved over here,
I had about a three-month lag time
before the next semester started.
And so I was like prepping everything. The computer had set up my own little desk office Over here, I had about a three month lag time before the next semester started.
So I was like prepping everything.
Computer had set up my own little desk office set up in my bedroom.
I'm like already to be all schooled out, right?
I'm about to knock this degree out.
And was so discouraged because it was so competitive to get classes.
I couldn't get a single class I needed to finish.
And so I was going to have to, in order to get the class you want,
you gotta get enrolled.
So then the next time.
Wait a minute, I had a time.
Yeah, and so I was like, so pissed
that I did not understand this.
Like, no one had told me this.
I didn't know it was gonna be like this.
So I went in this.
I'm doing this whole life changing move.
Leave my friends and where, my hometown.
I'm gonna go here.
I'm gonna buckle down school.
That's all I'm gonna do. And I'm gonna knock this degree out. And then my first experience of
getting enrolled at JC over here to finish off the AA, not a single class that I could take.
That was, that would apply to it. That was so-
Now, were you working as a trainer at this point?
I was. And you're already, you're starting to see you're making a lot of money.
So that's why it was, I mean, it was a relatively easy decision, right? It wasn't an easy decision.
I remember I went back and forth on it for a really long time.
What was happening was I went across the street because there was a 24-off fitness across
the street and I walked in to get a membership and I was already, I had already bought a national
certification because I thought it would be cool to have a job one day.
I wasn't like in any hurry to do it at one day as a personal trainer.
So I bought this national cert
kind of barely going through it
while I was also going to school
with the desire to go and finish my kinesiology degree.
And when I wrote that down on the profile,
that got the attention of the fitness manager
who came over and was like,
hey, you want a job?
And I'm like, I wasn't really trying to get a job.
I was wanting a membership.
So the membership comes for free when you have a job.
So okay, I'm listening.
And so I tell them that I would be willing
to work part time because I have school
coming up in three months.
In that three month time of getting ready to go to school,
every single paycheck, every two weeks increased.
And you gotta remember that I was a kid
that was working in a dairy before that.
And I had worked myself up to $7 an hour.
All of a sudden, I'm making like $30 an hour
plus commissions plus bonuses.
It was more money that I'd ever seen in my life before.
And you loved it.
And I loved it.
That was me.
I loved what I did, and I was making six figures,
at 18 years old, and I remember telling my,
you know, thinking about going to college
and what I wanted to do, and I remember looking up the average know, thinking about going to college and what I wanted to do.
And I remember looking up the average pay of a physical therapist
at the time, which is what I was going to go to school for.
Like, wait a minute, I'm making more than that now.
I'm not working in a shitty hospital.
I love the gym.
Maybe I'll just give this a shot.
Did you have something that someone said to you
that lit a fire in you at all?
Did you remember, do you recall that?
Or was it just purely like, I love doing this?
It's not, it's just for you.
But I was, I love that shit.
I was hyper day one.
I went in there and just went crazy.
But it really was a conversation with my general manager
because this is right before I took my first class
and was like, hell no.
I signed up and I told him,
I said, man, I don't know.
Maybe I need to step down.
At the time I was going, I was a fitness manager and I was gonna maybe step down so I could to step down. At the time, I was a fitness manager
and I was gonna maybe step down so I could go to school
and we were talking and he goes,
probably goes, I know how much you make.
Are you sure?
He goes, don't you love this?
I said, yeah, and he goes,
no much physical therapist make and we talked about it.
And he's like, why would you want to do that?
And I'm like, I couldn't logically justify it at all.
Cause I said, you know, to be honest with you,
I don't want to work in a clinical setting and
I'm making more money and I love this
And so it just made sense and so when I told myself was I'll give myself one year
That's why I said I'll do this for a year and at the end of the year
I could always decide to go back to school and of course the rest of the
If I found the gym in in that work environment like you guys did before I probably would have been the same perdicament
I just had a massive chip on my shoulder like I literally just in that work environment like you guys did before, I probably would have been the same per dickament.
I just had a massive chip on my shoulder.
Like I literally just graduated with purely out of grudge.
You know, like I wanted to, you know,
this is where everybody else is.
This is where you and I connect very well.
This is where we're a lot of like for sure.
Yeah, and so I mean, it was, it was,
it was nobody, I definitely hold a grudge,
you know, to everybody that was doubting me.
You know, and that was literally what fueled it.
That and also playing ball as long as I possibly could.
Like, that was like my last chance to actually like,
sweetheart, you were my thing.
You played at a pretty damn good level.
I made perfect sense.
I had nothing pulling me to go there.
Right, at all.
There was no, I didn't play any sports.
I hated it.
I'm gonna make less money and
stop doing the thing. There's also a lot of power in knowing how to tap into pain like
that. There's a really good book you'd like that I'm reading right now. It's called
your next five moves. I think is the name of it. I'm really enjoying it right now. And
he talks about the ability to tap into that. And to not be handcuffed by it, to where
you feel like.
Yeah, or it's like an insecurity.
Yeah, right.
But there's, there is nothing wrong with using that and, and using it as rocket fuel to
take you wherever you want to go.
And that I can identify with that.
I remember I had a conversation with, I'll never forget after I got my national cert, I was
getting ready to move to San Jose, I was talking about my degree that I wanted to get
in kinesiology.
And I'm sitting down with my girlfriend at the time,
her father, who is a lawyer, really smart guy,
respected him like, and very knowledgeable,
very successful, and inspired to be like him, right?
And he just totally crushed me by telling me
that it was a terrible idea,
like just getting your Kinesiology
to raise a waste of time.
If you're gonna go in the fitness and gym ministry,
you'll never make more than $50,000 a year.
And at that time, I already committed to all this.
So it was like after the fact,
it's like I got to the National Surid,
I'm moving to San Jose, this is what I've got my plan
in my head, and then I'm sitting down,
and he's like, what are you gonna do?
You know, ask me and I'm laying out my plan.
And he's just like, oh yeah,
well, so you're gonna settle for 50 grand or less
for the rest of your life. You wanna do it, my daughter? Yeah, and that's how I, and yeah, well, so you're gonna settle for 50 year-round or less for the rest of your life.
You wanna date my daughter?
Yeah, that's how I, and of course,
I'm in love with this girl,
it's my high school sweetheart type of deal
and I'm just like, I feel like this guy
just thinks I'm a puke.
That was a huge motivator for me for a very long time.
No, you know what the reality is,
if you're a kid and you got the drive
and the ambition and the work ethic,
you're gonna be fine.
That's the truth. You're gonna be fine. That's the truth.
You're going to be fine.
Wherever you apply it.
It is, I mean, you're going to be a millionaire or whatever, but you're going to be okay.
You can work in most industries and you're going to find a way to do okay and to be successful
regardless of education.
And that's the truth.
And that's why when they do these studies and they say people with a degree make X amount
more dollars, what they don't control for studies and they say, people with a degree make X amount more dollars,
what they don't control for is that,
because what you get with a lot of people
who don't go to college is a lot of them just aren't
fucking driven.
And a lot of kids that go to college,
at least are driven enough to do that.
Well, yeah, it's a bias, right?
You get a bunch of kids that at least know
how to apply discipline, right?
That's right.
Or to get your degree.
You still have to be disciplined.
It takes sacrifice, discipline, consistency.
So it definitely gets, it's just like people that go through the military. Like you get a lot of great
benefits from doing that because it lays a foundation that that carries over into success in life.
So that's really the bias from college. It has Larry Little to do with the degree in which I mean
shit, I don't know. I mean, I bet I've we quiz Justin right now on half the shitty learning
college, but he couldn't please don't. Yeah. And most people can't, you know,
but what you did get from that is the idea of like having
like a schedule and studying for things
and being and sacrificing and being consistent
and dissonant yourself.
And a lot of it depends of course.
Of course on the field in some cases,
it's required and it makes a lot of sense.
But even especially today,
because of the cost of education,
more and more people now are starting to weigh it out.
Because when Doug went to school,
it was so inexpensive.
Oh, I'm dying, I'm so sorry.
And the internet rocked.
Yeah, chiseled.
You know what I'm saying?
He went to college, he was the John the Baptist.
No, it's...
He wrote a stegosaurus.
No, the truth is, it was so inexpensive, there was no internet, so it would have been
much more difficult to gain skills.
And it wasn't like he'd go into debt, go into college back then.
So it made sense.
Today, a lot of people now are weighing it out and going, okay, who is I talking to you?
I was talking to a family friend and young kid.
And he's like, you know, he was talking about college and he says, I said, well, what do you want to do?
He was, well, I want to be an entrepreneur.
I want to start a business.
I'm like, okay, he goes, should I go to school?
What are you going to learn there?
That's going to be valuable besides, you know,
and that not going to debt.
I said, you're better off, whatever field
you want to start your business in,
go do a free internship, go work under someone,
it'll be for free, but you're not gonna go into debt,
you'll learn way more in a short period of time there
than you will go into school.
Now, if he had told me that he wanted to be a surgeon,
then I would have been like, yeah, for sure,
you're gonna have to go get a formal education.
But you gotta look at it all,
and people are doing that a lot nowadays.
Anyway, I've been getting, so you guys know,
there was that article I brought up a couple times
on the fertility crash or whatever
that they're predicting.
You're scaring the shit out of us.
Yeah, like testosterone's low, sperm counts are down,
women are less fertile,
I even brought up some studies on Parkinson's
going through the roof and they think it's
this particular chemical that you find in like carpet cleaners
and stuff like that, right?
So there's a lot of new science coming out that's showing that.
A lot of these products that we've used for a long time, cleaning products, plastics,
and things that we use have a lot of these chemicals. Those people are like, okay, I'm a little
afraid. What do I do? Where do I go? What's easy? And it's like there's so much stuff that we could
go down a list of all the things that you use.
So I'm just pointing people now to our sponsor public goods because it's part of their, that's part of their, their whole business.
Their mission.
The whole model is part of their models based on that.
All their products are devoid of those toxic substances.
Speaking of public goods.
So you can get all your stuff there and you'll, and you know, you're, you're relatively sad.
Speaking of public goods,
actually last night Katrina was reordering our stuff.
And so I've actually now started,
so we no longer work with what's
from called the other soap company.
And I started to use...
We'll just call them that.
The other soap company.
The other one.
And she actually was like,
I'm so glad you guys aren't working with him
and you like the public goods soap.
And I'm like, why?
She's like, have you seen what our order is for public goods? And I'm like glad you guys aren't working with him and you like the public goods soap and I'm like, why? She's like, have you seen what our order is for public goods?
And I'm like, what?
Because we use everything now.
Like I have got-
Oh, yeah, the turgent, everything.
Yes, all the laundry detergent, the softener in it,
the spray for the counters, like all the soaps
and the hand soaps.
Now I use the bars so like I use all the stuff.
She's like, you know what I,
and I mind you, I put it in every room,
I got it all stocked up.
She's like, our order is under $100.
That's how cheap it is.
Yeah, hell of it, as super inexpensive.
And it's, in part of their business model
is avoiding all these known toxic chemicals.
So, but normally when you buy stuff like that, right?
Because almost all of our partners are like that, right?
Where we partner with more It's more expensive.
Very expensive.
Yeah, no, they're not very, very expensive.
But they're very, very extreme.
But I like it because when I'm trying to help people, right?
And I get a lot of DMs, so I can't answer everybody,
but I try to help as much as I can.
And it's like, I have to go down the list.
What's the best shampoo?
What's the best soap?
What about the best, you know, moisturiser?
So rather than doing all that, here go to this one place, everything there.
Right, right.
It falls under this category.
Yes, and so it's a lot easier
than having to pick one thing at a time.
Right, right, so.
Do you guys see the news that came out on Uber recently?
No.
On their next big move.
Oh, no, no, no.
Oh, you guys don't know?
No.
I like it.
Here's our, is this a good thing?
It's stock update here.
You got to pull up Uber stock for me me so I can see where it's at?
Dude, I own some of their stock.
Do you really?
For a long time.
Oh boy, buckle up.
This is gonna be a good ride.
Yeah, I think so.
I mean, I'm guessing, right?
So I don't know what the fuck I'm talking about,
but I'm guessing.
Oh shit.
They're kind of up a little bit.
Well, yeah, probably because the news is coming out.
So they are talking about acquiring a marijuana delivery service.
Oh, hell yeah.
Well, just think about how easy that would be for them to do it
because they already have the driving force.
Oh, of course.
I mean, they did it with Uber Eats, right?
That was an easy transition for them to become one
of the big competitors with DoorDash and all the other ones.
So that was an easy transition.
So the next big thing they're looking to do
is delivery service with marijuana. And that's exploding already as it is. So imagine what big thing they're looking to do is delivery service with marijuana.
And that's exploding already as it is.
So imagine what a player they would be if they do that.
Marijuana delivery is brilliant
because if I know anything about stoners,
it's there.
They don't want to drive on the side.
You know what I'm saying?
They don't want to get up, dude.
Like, oh, the first one at the stoplight
that you're just like honking, is it, whoah.
I'd really like to get a joint.
Yeah.
I got a drive.
Yeah.
Brilliant move though, don't you think?
Hell is smart.
Yeah, especially if they can combine it with Uber Eats.
Oh my God.
No joke.
No joke.
Just think about that for a second.
I mean, we talked about the group.
I'll remember when Jack in the Box made the move.
I really believe that Jack in the Box had the four sides
to know they were catering to a market that nobody was,
which is the all the stone.
24 hours.
Yeah, the stoneers, the ronks that are up at two, three o'clock in the morning and want
something to eat.
Like I just think this is another brilliant move.
Imagine that.
You could be a stone or at three o'clock in the morning order your Jack in the box from
Uber Eats.
I mean, that's exciting.
A joint on the way, right?
Yeah.
Game changer.
By the way, any dropper, man.
Is it, is it, is it, is it, is it, is it Jack in the Box as the tacos?
Yeah, you know what's weird?
You wouldn't even know that.
I love those tacos.
You wouldn't even know that for a processed
like for like the gross category of tacos.
The best.
Their tacos are better than Taco Bells.
Well, I know that.
They had the colossal burger or whatever.
It had like three patties and like just stuffed bacon each layer
You know with cheese it was it was insane. It's down to horny
Just like to slurp the
All right, so let's talk a little bit about current events. So right now what's going on?
Are we gonna go controversy? It's not really controversial. Come on, stop shaking your head, Doug.
All right, so here's, so this is news right now, right?
So Johnson and Johnson,
oh, this is controversial.
No, it's not.
It rolls out, I'm gonna tell you,
this is a good conversation.
They roll out their vaccine, right?
And the CDC just halted it.
It just halted it.
Because there were about six cases of,
and there were women who had blood clotting disorders one death
So they put a halt on the Johnson and Johnson. So I read there was like an 18 year old boy and someone else who's in critical condition
I don't know. I don't know, but I know this from Ray read the receipt
But nonetheless the CDC said let's put a halt on this now. Here's a deal
So I have a lot of family members that loved to debate and discuss this kind of stuff. And, you know, okay, we obviously work in the fitness space.
And I identified a long time ago that there's definitely
zealots on one side who are like,
I believe everything that the FDA tells me,
I will follow the government regulations,
and recommendations, because that's the best.
And then there's zealots on the other side who are like, if it's not 100%
if it's not an essential oil, then I'm not gonna need it.
Did you know I didn't believe that other side.
You just said until just recently,
like I have a neighbor who has like a sign
that's out on their yard that says like,
we believe Dr. Fauci.
Yeah, that's a sign.
So there's zealots on both sides.
Like you really need a sign for that?
I know, dude.
And so I got this argument with one of my family members
because they were like, you see one or one more immunologist.
There you go.
They're like, no, I just found you.
But like, you know what?
I knew it.
You see, I told you the vaccines are bad.
I'm like, you know what, dude?
They're fucked if they do or they don't.
Because if the CDC says nothing, then you're like,
oh, they're in bed with the vaccine companies. They all want to make money. Then the CDC says halt it
and rather than being like, oh, good job. They actually are trying to keep a safe. You're
going to say something like, I told you it was bad. Right. It's like, come on, man. There's
there's a little bit of zealotry happening on both sides. No, I absolutely. So it was Johnson
and Johnson, the only one under fire right now, that vaccine or the other one. Aspercenica too,
which was the UK based company.
Okay.
Yeah, that they had some issues too.
But, you know, here's a deal.
Now, is this really out of the ordinary though,
for any vaccine, right?
I mean, there's always, isn't there always like,
a small percentage of people that have an adverse effect?
Of course.
So, this is the current data.
As of right now, the vaccines that are out
have been administered, I think,
180 or 200 million people.
Almost 200 million people have had these vaccines,
not the Johnson and Johnson one, but cumulative, right?
All these vaccines that are out.
So far, they've been proven to be remarkably safe
and remarkably effective.
Now, here's the caveat.
There's no way to no long-term effects
until a few years from now.
That's impossible. But so far, short term, it seems to be very, very safe.
Loose promise. Now here's this is a conversation I had with my buddies who are like, you know,
all over the place. And I said, look, here's a deal. Like, I don't fully believe and trust
the government because I work in the fitness industry and I know what the food pyramid looks like.
And I'll that shit. so I know that's bullshit.
The terrible job.
I'm also not on the side that says everything that they say
and put out is bullshit either.
I've seen people hurt themselves with some of their wellness.
I'm not an anti-vaxxer for that.
Or just like if it's not growing off a tree
then I won't touch it or whatever,
or Western medicine, he's evil type of side.
I'm not on either side.
So what I'm using on either side. So what is the, I guess the,
what am I using as a litmus test?
I like using the market.
If hundreds of millions or billions of people
are doing something and then we see this three,
four years later, I'll just look at that.
I'll look at that and see and then start to make my decision.
Well, here's where I do have a bit of an issue.
So did you guys hear about it?
What is it, St. Lucia, or like it's one of those islands where
basically there was a volcano eruption.
And so this is like a real disaster, natural disaster, where they were trying to shuttle
people off the island.
It was St. Vincent, volcano.
St. Vincent, okay.
So basically, like they had these cruise ships
that were going out there to save these people
and get them off the island.
And what the stipulations were,
though, according to their person in charge,
was that they had to have a vaccine
in order to get on board.
And there's only 10% of the population
even had the vaccine or had access to it.
So now, what do you trying to say
that these other people aren't valuable?
Their life is not valuable.
Like that's a crime against humanity in my perspective.
Wow, that's interesting.
Yeah, if you weren't vaccinated, they wouldn't let.
And I get there logic, right?
They're trying to say, look, we don't want to start
a COVID breakout on the whatever.
Sure, that's, I mean, I don't know.
But it's an extreme situation.
Again, this is where you're talking about zealots.
That's zealotry.
Like you can't, like you gotta, you gotta weigh it out.
Like what's, like, there's always an exception.
What's the percentage of people?
There's always an exception to the rule.
That's the exception to the rule.
Also, what's the percentage of people
that have recovered from COVID?
Yeah.
So versus just letting people die, you know,
from how
I mean, volcano explosion, maybe a fucking brain, whatever, it's very, it's very obvious.
Yeah, it's with lava versus COVID. Yeah. Okay. So where is that at right now? What's,
what, I mean, do we know what's happening? Are they really stranded over there? Like
what's going on? Like that. Yeah, I didn't do it, but that literally, I just found out
about this like yesterday. So I was like, very heated about it. Yeah. Yeah. Oh,
wow, it just vaccinated. Yeah. Just just yesterday. So I was like, very heated about it. Yeah, yeah. Oh, wow.
It just vaccinated.
Yeah.
Just just happened. Yeah, I wonder.
It's a rough thing.
We've got to be careful with all the stuff.
Okay, so now, speculating time right here.
So do you guys think that, because I think we're seeing what's
happening, we're going to move in this direction.
We're really soon here like, you know, a lot of flights
are going to require, I think it's already happening, right?
Some flights are requiring.
Well, some states have passed.
I think there's three states that have said
that they will ban any kind of COVID passport.
And so Texas, I can't remember the other one.
So what it sounds like?
It makes a good,
it explains what that means,
that they would ban a COVID passport.
Yeah, so COVID passport would be like a government issued,
ID of some sort,
they're talking about it being on your phone,
that if you have a vaccine that you could scan it wherever,
and they'll say that you are vaccinated.
And I know there's a few states that have put it,
they have past laws that said,
this will not be legal.
We will not allow this with our residents.
Yeah, but not allow what?
I don't understand what they're saying.
They won't allow them in?
No, they're not allowing the passports to be used in the state
or to be, they're not basically,
they're not legitimizing the passports in the state. Now here's the beauty of the be used in the state or to be, they're not basically, they're not legitimizing
the passports in the state. Now, here's the beauty of the state system in our country.
Is there's a lot of, there's this pushback. If, you know, 15 of the states say that, sorry,
our laws say that it's not going to happen, then a federal, you know, passport system
isn't going to work very well, is it? So let me ask you another question then about people that
have certain conditions, or they're going through chem ask you another question then, about people that have certain conditions,
or they're going through chemo treatment,
or whatever, you cannot introduce these type of vaccines
to somebody in that state.
Well, I had a family friend of that.
So now what, what happens?
They can't get a vaccine passport.
You're gonna discriminate against them?
Well, no, I had a family friend of that,
is pregnant, just got pregnant,
and was like, I don't want to take the vaccine right now,
but was being, if they wanted to travel somewhere,
they were gonna have to do that.
Yeah, that's like, yeah.
Well, private companies are free to do that.
That's okay.
Okay, so that was where I originally was going at,
is so do you think that we're going to see airlines
that require it in airlines that don't require it?
I think that you're gonna see some tested out.
I definitely agree about that.
That's gonna happen.
The market will tell them if it's a good idea.
This is the flawed mandating like a general rule like that.
People have to really think about that.
Yeah, no, I don't like mandating that you.
Because I think that's the move to me is that
there's such a competitive market.
And again, I know you're big on this.
Let the market decide.
Why not have half know half of the
Airlines that go hey, we allow anybody on here. I don't give fuck. Well, I'm an airline
We don't fuck around
You know, and then you have the other side that are like you know
We you have to have all these boxes check to get on our plane or sorry you ain't fine
Well, there's a market
Totally valid so there was recently this happened where there was a couple with a child.
So I know if a kid is older than two or something like that,
they're required to wear a mask.
Anyway, the kid wouldn't wear a mask if you're a parent
and you have a three-year-old, you know how hard it is
to get your kid to put on the fucking socks,
let alone wear a mask over their face on a plane, right?
So kid wouldn't wear it, the plane, the people on the plane,
not the people, but the airline itself,
tried to kick these people off, the plane.
Like, sorry, you can't fly with us.
The whole plane, all the passengers left.
Oh, that's so cool.
They all left.
Finally, really.
I didn't know that.
I didn't know that.
Yeah, there was a case when that happened.
Yeah, so that gives me hope.
Yeah, so everybody was like,
hey, that's not cool.
We're all gonna walk off this.
That is not cool.
Yeah, so.
You're seeing this kind of push back,
and so we will see what happens.
We'll see what happens with all of this.
I don't like demandated shit though.
I don't like force.
Yeah, no.
You can't force me to put something in my body, no matter what.
Now, you can say, I'm not allowed in your house
or your business.
I get that, but you can't force me to put something
in my body, that's scary.
Now, you brought up Texas, so there's a Domino's right now
is partnered with a company called NuroNURRO.
I believe is how you spell it.
And it's a automated self-driving car
and they've already started to implement
pizza delivery service that's completely autonomous.
Wow, so you ordered a pizza and it drives your car?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Isn't that crazy? That is crazy. Yeah, that's happening right now. But you know, pizza and it drives your house. Yeah, yeah. Isn't that crazy?
That is crazy.
Yeah, that's happening right now.
But, you know, I don't know if you guys remember,
there was a time when that dominoes almost completely went under.
It was like, I wanna say it was like 10, 15 years ago.
Yeah, we got a new CEO and all, man.
Talk about a comeback story.
So I got a question for you, right?
How soon until, how long until there it is right there?
Those trucks start to get hijacked.
Oh yeah.
Think about that, right?
Cause, really you're gonna risk going to. Think about that, right? Because-
Really you're gonna risk going to gel over a pizza, bro?
Dude, it's, okay, you get a bunch of teenage kids
who are like, oh fuck, and there's no one in there,
you're like, fuck, I'm taking out.
So pizza truck?
Yeah, dude, like, I wouldn't-
Think about that.
I don't think so.
That'd be a prime target.
Well, here's the thing, what?
How many pizza truck deaths?
Well, okay, here's the thing.
It's gonna be, it's a low, low risk for dominoes.
I mean, what's the worst of happens?
You get eight pizzas stole from you?
Is that so?
You get an expensive ass AI car.
Yeah, yeah, but I mean, at the, and I'm sure they got cameras
and sensors all in.
Well, there's no money on it, right?
It's all they're coming.
Yeah, that's what I'm saying.
So, I mean, you're gonna get, you're gonna get six pizzas.
Like, you're some kid, like, what kid is gonna want it?
I mean, you gotta be pretty stupid.
I don't know, dude, I was a pretty shitty kid
and I'm not that that not I would do this
But if I was gonna throw a rock at a movie vehicle it would have been a ton of
How does it get delivered from there to the person so it just showed up right there Doug show it show you probably walk up to it
And you probably have your app and it opens the door scans it open
Yeah, okay, yeah, I'd be like I'd be like sketching you know behind it remember and
Yeah, the rollerblade game where you grab the bumper.
I can't believe you.
You grabbed the bumper.
What a great reference there.
Yeah, dude, so you get on a skateboard and you sketch,
you know, behind the car.
And so you do that and wait for it to stop.
What a stop and then boom, taking a picture.
Hold on, fuck it.
Did you ever do that?
Yeah.
You actually held on to a car with your skateboard?
Yeah, because I was with a bunch of idiots.
No, you didn't.
Yeah, we did that with your bunch of idiots. No, you didn't. Yeah, we did that.
You go fast.
Dude, it was scary.
We did it in local air.
It wasn't like it was any busy roads.
That's dangerous.
It is.
Why are you laughing?
Did you do it too?
No, but it's just a dumb conversation.
What?
What?
What?
You never sketched.
Did you go fast?
Why, you hold me under a car?
No, I only went two miles an hour and I had my it taking me around the parking lot. It was so crazy. Yeah
Hey, oh, no, that's a car dude. What the hell effect? I know it's stupid 100% when it was home
It was a thing in the like the late 80s early 90s. I'm already McFly did it. Yeah, it was really it was pop
I don't know who made it popular. That was a very popular Nintendo game. I love that yeah
Yeah, yeah, that was a great game. Well, Sega Sega Nintendo It's called sketching sketching. Yeah, I think sketching was the very popular Nintendo game. I love that. Yeah, yeah, yeah. That was a great game. Sega, Sega Nintendo, I don't know which one.
It was called Sketchin.
Sketchin was a game.
Yeah, I think Sketchin was the name of the game.
Check it out, Doug.
Pull it out.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, that was a great game.
Did you own a Sega too?
Yeah, I had all the game.
You had Genesis Nintendo.
From Atari.
From Atari all the way to all.
Did you have Dreamcast?
I did.
Oh, wow.
I got one for, did you have TurboGraphics 16?
So I didn't get to turn it because that was like, that was short lived. That was very short lived. Remember Bonk's adventure on there? I do I got one. I got one for you. I got you there turbo graphics 16 So I didn't get it because that was rendered that was short lived. That was very short
Remember bonks adventure on there. I do remember that one big old head guy looks like Justin. Yeah, there it is
There it is 1994
I love that game dog look up you pick up like pipes and you're racing people on the cars
And you get you beat yeah, you beat people off the car such a good game. Oh, wow
That's really cool.
Yeah, yeah.
So Adam, I wanted to ask you, you were on,
because both you and I did the,
it was like, was it Jason Phillips has a group?
Yes.
Yes.
So it's this group of trainers, so these are people
he's coaching, and basically they're asking you questions.
What was your impression of the whole thing?
Oh, really good.
I mean, I don't know what Jason talked to you about,
but he talked a lot about scaling a company
and then while you're, and even also starting
in the direction.
So he's got a lot of entrepreneurs that he attracts,
like people that are,
these are all trainers that are trying to build their business.
Yeah, and so a lot of them are aspiring
to do something similar to like Mind Pump.
And I always talk about the whole value thing, right?
Like, it's in every time you purchase anything,
it always comes down to two things, value and price.
And, you know, this was something
that we were all very, very aware of before we did this
because of our experience and other businesses.
And knew that, even though this was a completely new medium
for me, we are us when we knew no idea about what we're doing,
we knew that the ultimate goal was,
can we provide so much damn value that whatever we sell
seems so, you know, it makes, it's like a no brainer.
Yeah, it's like, oh my God, I feel I would have paid hundreds,
maybe even thousands of dollars to get the wisdom that these guys have given me for free.
So the fact that they're offering these programs for whatever price it's a no-brainer.
And so I always kind of drill that home to an audience like that is to get that across to them that, you know, stop looking at what all the other Instagram models and people are doing to hack the algorithms. It's like, go to the value thing.
And if you can't convince people, and I say this to anybody who wants to do something similar,
if you can't convince people to get something from free from you, you got to stay there.
You're not ready for that.
That's true.
That's the first level.
Yeah, you're not by free.
Yeah, you're not ready to sell anybody anything or build a business. If you cannot convince people to pay attention to you
for free or give you an email address for free
because you're giving that you're providing them something,
then you're not doing a good enough job,
giving them enough value.
They don't even see it.
It's not even worth them giving their email up
because they don't think you're gonna have a nice.
So don't try and sell them something.
That's one of the worst things that you can do.
Yeah, no, that's great advice.
You know, it's funny.
You can really judge, I guess, a company or, you know,
just by the people that work there or that follow it.
And every time I meet somebody who is under his tutelage
or from NCI, they love it.
All the trainers there.
Because they would ask me questions
and ask them questions back.
And they loved the whole certification process.
They loved their fanatical about it.
And he does, they do a phenomenal job.
And it's crazy to me because the online certification market
is, I mean, it's an exploding market.
And he's positioned so well.
No, he is.
And Jason, where's his heart on his sleeve?
And it's one of the things I think that we all love
about the guy.
I think he always comes from a really good place.
And he's got a lot of energy.
I mean, I don't envy what he does.
I mean, he works his ass off.
I mean, that guy is working 12 hour days every day.
And he does.
He prides himself on being connected to everybody.
So he's built himself a fairly large business.
And he still really connect all the people
that are putting money in his direction.
He stays connected to them and is like,
he's got the open door policy of like you send me a message.
I'll call you back.
Like, and he's that guy.
And again, just speaks to what I was talking about.
He's like, he just provides so much value
to all these coaches that the dollar amount that they spend
and he provides so much free good content
that they're like, it's a no brainer.
So Cassie did the gut health course.
So they have a whole course on gut health.
And she's pretty well versed anyway
because she's dealt with her own gut health issues.
So she went through it and asked for her opinion and she's like, she said it was brilliant. Lots of amazing information and she said,
it's really good. A, if you're a trainer, but I said, what about people who aren't trainers?
Obviously it makes sense if you're a trainer. She said, if you want to learn more about your own
gut health, it's a great place to go because you get the cert or whatever you take the course,
but you learn how to help
assess yourself and figure out your own stuff. Which is good because I mean I've dealt with gut health
issues and you have to piecemeal together your information so it's like a one stop shop type of deal.
So very cool. Good stuff.
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Alright, our first caller is David from California.
Hey, what's up, David?
How can we help you?
Hey, guys, how's it going?
First of all, thank you for all this you do.
I really appreciate it.
I learned a ton from the YouTube channel.
I had a question about how to integrate kettlebells
into a three day week full body type program.
Prior to the pandemic,
I had been training like an upper lower type split and then when Jim's closed,
we tried a few home programs eventually settled on working with kettlebells which actually enjoyed
a lot in the absence of a barbell. But when the second lockdown kind of hit, you know, we finally
couldn't take it, we bought a rig for the patio, you know, barbell squat rack, all the stuff we need.
And I'm so happy to be kind of backlifting heavy weights.
And so I was able to recognize a ton of value
from the kettlebell training, which was new to me at the time.
So I guess my question is, how can I best integrate
some kettlebell training into more barbell dominant
three day per week full body type program,
still like optimize the benefits of both.
Yeah, that's a good question.
I need more information though.
What are your fitness goals?
Because that makes a difference.
Definitely strength, strength aesthetics.
Okay.
Yeah.
So you're looking to get stronger and look at it.
Okay, so.
So kettlebells are another form of resistance,
just like dumbbells, barbells, cables,
or even resistance bands.
And now, if your goals were a little bit different,
let's say your goals were athletic performance,
or then my answer might be a little different,
but your goals are pretty general.
I wanna get stronger, I wanna look better.
In that case, what you wanna do is you wanna look at the tools
that you're gonna use for resistance resistance training and use them with the exercises that they're best suited for.
For example, if you're going to do loaded squats and you want to go heavy, it's hard to
be to barbell.
Barbell is going to be one of your best tools for heavy loaded squats.
If you're going to do a windmill, kettlebells are one of the best devices you can use.
And that mainly has to do with the weight that the weight is loaded and how it sits on
your forearm.
So, there's a few exercises I love kettlebells for.
I love them for kettlebell specific exercises.
So like swings, obviously, you wanna do swings, you're gonna use a kettlebell over a dumbbell
or a barbell.
I love shoulder presses. Overhead presses going to use a kettlebell over a dumbbell or a barbell. I love shoulder presses.
Overhead presses are awesome with a kettlebell.
It's a totally different feel.
The weight sits lower on the arm, so it's a shorter lever.
And it encourages this kind of straight line spiraling effect when you do an overhead press.
You could also use kettlebells for some exercises to change the way that the tension feels on
the body.
For example, when you do a fly, a chest fly, if you use kettlebells, you'll notice you
have a different feeling with the tension when you drop the weight and then when you bring
it up because the weight sits outside of your arms.
So you can play with that as well.
But honestly, my favorite exercises with kettlebells are carries, swings, and overhead
presses with Turkish get-ups and what I say, windmills.
Those are probably the best exercises I could think of with kettlebells.
And I would put those in to replace dumbbell and barbell exercises for those kind of
respective body parts or goals.
Yeah, it sounds to me.
Well, I know back in the day, we had like a smaller program out of this kettlebell for
aesthetics, but we just basically took a lot of, you know, common exercises and we put
them together in kind of an aesthetic type routine.
There's a lot of versatility with kettlebells is the point to that.
So, you know, if your goal is to get strong, but also like really try and shape your body,
like there's a way to do that by loading kettlebells.
I like to use them personally more for, you know, lateral type training.
And it really complements, like, barbell training very well because it's such a different stimulus
and it's such a different way to, you know, load the body and have to account for that. And like Sal said, with unique moves like windmills
or bent presses, or things where there's a lot more rotation.
So any chance that you can add rotation
like in your rows and your overhead pressing,
any kind of pressing, I think it's a very valuable tool
for that because of the way it's loaded.
So honestly, I think that even if you have
an established barbell routine you're already doing,
you can also add that in as like accessory lifts.
So, a question for you,
are we looking to add the kettlebell exercises
into the three day week routine,
or are you looking to potentially complement that
on off days with the kettlebells?
Is that an option, or are we sticking with the three day on off days with the kettlebells?
Is that an option or are we sticking with the three day routine that because that changes
my answer?
Yeah, I'm not married to three days.
I mean, I kind of was going with three days because once I switched back to doing like
a full, full body routine, it just worked better for me.
But I think having the rig on my patio is made it a little bit easier to get out there when I can.
So I think I'm not married to three days necessarily, maybe more as a complimentary type of
type of.
Okay, cool, because that definitely changes my answer.
So first, your main goal is strengthen the way you look.
So to be honest, running the three day week, barbell routine is going to get you the most
strength and probably build the best aesthetic physique.
Now, I love to use kettlebells.
How are, and your goals kind of aligned with kind of my goals.
So how I like to do it is I normally pick one, two, three max of these kettlebell exercises that the guys both brought up.
And I might do that on an, just on an off day.
So like I have my three full body routine or routine.
And then in the middle and there,
I might do Turkish get ups, wind meals, and carries.
That's it, you know, it'll be a 20, 30 minute type of routine
and I'm just gonna practice the skill of those movements.
One thing that's cool about kettlebells is they,
they're definitely high skill type of exercises
and takes a lot of practice to get good at it.
You probably I'll have to work on some mobility
if you are limited in some movements,
like windmills and things like that.
And like Turkish get up, which I think is really challenging.
So I like to just pick one or two of those movements
and just practice them and get good at it.
And I would either one, add them into my three day week routine
or two set a day aside where it's like,
this is my kind of functional day. I'm just gonna to work on mobility. I'm going to work on these two
or three kettlebell movements and the goal is not to push the weight really
hard. It's just to get better at the movement. That will carry over into your
three day routine and you're not you're desired outcome when you're
training the kettlebells. It's more about the movement and the art of it and
the skill of it versus like really hammering the weight.
Save the hammering the weights and your growth
and your strength and changing your physique
for the three day a week routine.
That's how I would do it.
And by the way, there's no wrong answer here.
I think everything that everybody said works.
It's really finding what works best for you.
Got it. That's awesome.
No, that helps a lot.
Thank you so much. I appreciate it.
No problem, Dave. Thank you so much. I appreciate it.
No problem, David.
Thanks for calling in.
Yeah, it's, you know, I never used kettle, but actually a lot of, most people didn't use
kettlebells for a long time.
And then I don't know.
It was probably what would you say?
You wouldn't even find them in gyms back in the day.
No, I think it was what?
Early 90s, I think it really started to take off.
Yeah, but I didn't really see them.
Yeah, I was going to say just to remember.
2000, I guess I was an early adopter.
Yeah. Yeah, you were, you were, but even when you worked for me, it's gonna say, just to remember. I don't remember. Well, I guess I was an early adopter. Yeah.
Yeah, you were, you were,
but even when you worked for me at Hillsdale,
there wasn't a kettlebell in there.
No.
That's true, it wasn't in the gyms.
No, I had to go, I had to go see.
Yeah, there was all,
so I always had like,
and it started probably in O506.
I was gonna say like early 2000.
Yeah, O506 I'd say,
I'd always have like one trainer,
that one guy who was like into like,
different musically as a Russian guy. one guy who was like into like different
musically as a Russian guy.
The guy who read Povls book.
Yeah.
Well, because two, one of the main reasons why it wasn't adopted early by your normal big
gym trainer was because it was like a thousand dollar, fifteen hundred dollars certification.
It was very expensive.
It was very expensive to get certified in kettlebells.
Nobody just, nobody knew how to use them.
You know, the irony is kettlebells are the original weights.
They're the free, the first The irony is kettlebells are the original weights.
The first free weights were kettlebells.
In fact, that's what dumbbells were called
because it was a bell that didn't make sound.
And then somebody created the dumbbell,
used the term and then they had to change the name
to kettlebell, but they've been around for a long time.
You can see the very first strong men
who are using weights, they didn't have dumbbells,
they had barbells with round ends,
and then they had kettlebells.
And I didn't use them for a long time.
And to be quite honest, aside from the kettlebell-specific
exercises, like you're not gonna do a swing
with a dumbbell or a barbell very well at all.
There are some exercises I think,
even traditional exercises I think kettlebells are better for.
Overhead presses, I prefer a kettlebell overhead press
to a dumbbell over, if I had to pick, and I like them both,
I'll do them both, but if I had to pick,
I like the kettlebell version.
Well, there's a reason for that, right?
It follows the natural spiraling of the shoulder
as you press for one, and two, it's loaded
on the back of your wrist, which naturally
pulls your back.
It helps hold the arms back behind you.
One of the number one problems when teaching a shoulder press
to almost any and every client
is the forward shoulders when they press up, the arching of the low back, loading the kettlebells on the back of the wrist when you press.
It falls at spiral rotation and in addition to that, it puts the weight on there.
It's also just a fuller range of motion.
I mean, you could do an Arnold press, I guess, with a dumbbell, but with a kettlebell, it's ideal for something like that.
Yeah, that's one of the oldest tools out there, you know,
that still has relevance today.
So it's like one of those things, like, obviously,
it's stood the test of time for reason.
Our next color is Kenzie from Ohio.
Hi, Kenzie, how can we help you?
Hi guys, nice to talk to you.
I've listened to you for probably about five years now.
So this is pretty cool.
So a little background on me.
I'm currently 18 weeks pregnant with identical twin girls.
I'm a twin, my mom's a twin as well.
So I guess it just runs in the family.
My background is college soccer at Ohio State.
I've ran a marathon and then I had a hip surgery
and then I got into bodybuilding.
So, that was for about probably three years then got engaged, so focused kind of on family.
So now being pregnant with my training background, it's been a little difficult.
It's not as fun to lift when I'm not lifting as heavy.
So that's been a little difficult.
So lifting is kind of just two times a week maybe
now, if that. So because my twins are identical, I'm high risk. So my activity has gone down a little
bit. So I'm just curious kind of getting ahead of myself. But once I have the babies and I'm
clear to work out, what is the best option to start with?
Because I know my core will be really weak
and probably have lost like a ton of muscles.
So I'm just kind of curious with my background,
but I know how to do lifts.
We have a full gym in my house.
So just kind of curious kind of where to go from there
once the babies are born.
So, Kenzie, the hardest thing for you is going to be
your competitive mindset and knowing how to steer that correctly.
Just hearing your background, collegiate level athlete,
body builder competitor, it sounds like you're kind of a badass
and you're definitely going to be in a different situation here and starting slow and right
is gonna be really, really important
and you're gonna be challenged to get impatient.
So that was the first thing that I wanna start off with.
I got cut out.
Can you hear me?
Well, I'm gonna finish telling you what,
or tell Kenzie what I would have told her anyways,
whether she can hear me or not.
So the thing that I would say is that,
you gotta be very careful on the dire too.
And I know Justin will be able to speak to this really well too,
because he has a competitive mindset too,
is going slow and gradual, right?
So the goal is always to do as little as possible
to elicit the most amount of change.
In your case, I think that map starter
would be the ideal place to start.
The one thing that, again, you're going to be challenged with is if you've got a competitive
bodybuilding type of background, it's not like heavy barbell squats, it's not movements
like that, but it's definitely where you should be right now before you progress into something
like a map centabolic.
Yeah.
When you're training, first off, post pregnancy, a lot of your success,
post pregnancy is gonna be what you did before you got pregnant
and what you did during your pregnancy.
Now, two days a week of resistance training,
during pregnancy is plenty to prevent a lot of muscle loss
and to maintain some strength.
So that's actually really, really good,
especially considering that you're pregnant with twins, which makes things much more difficult.
Post-pregnancy, Adam said,
MAP starter, it's the best program I would recommend.
If you don't have MAP starter for people who are listening
who aren't familiar with MAP starter,
essentially you want to train a lot of unilateral exercises.
So one leg, one arm, you want to use a stability ball,
you want to go light, and
you want to focus on full range of motion, and you really want to practice the movements,
don't push the body. Allow your body to slowly progress, and consider this, because I've
trained a lot of women pre-during in post pregnancy, and the three months post pregnancy is the hardest.
After about four or five months,
then the body really starts to kick into gear.
So what you're doing that for that first few months
is really just getting your body to move right,
getting your core to function again
because you're gonna be so disconnected
from some of the muscles in your core,
so getting those to fire,
getting everything to kind of strengthen.
After about four, five, six months,
then you'll start to,
and this is the comment I used to get
from pregnant women all the time,
or post-pregnant women all the time,
was after about five or six months,
they'd come to me and say,
oh, I'm starting to feel like myself again.
And then we would start to kind of ramp things up,
and then their bodies would progress rather quickly.
But post-pregnancy, you're just trying to move, get your body to reconnect because,
and just for lack of a better term, during pregnancy, it feels like, in some cases, this
is true, your body's not yours.
What I mean by that, it's not just transforming into something else.
Yeah.
And that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's,
that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's,
that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's, that's And that's, right. Yeah. Like to Adam's point, it's, it's such a mental hurdle,
especially I think for athletes to really change the mindset and change, you know, the approach
towards what is sort of like, I mean, it's your home base, like training used to be, it meant
something completely different when you'd go to approach it. And so I think just really kind of
putting your, your mind around
what's gonna be best,
you know, in terms of like listening to your body,
feeling your body as you're working out,
and trying to come in with more of a calm head space,
I think that, you know, that's really gonna help a lot.
Yeah, so here's the two options for someone like you,
because I think Adam opened it up
with any hit the nail square on the head, okay?
Here's your two options, either one, you go slower than you think and slowly allow your
body to adjust and progress.
Or here's the other thing that would probably happen with someone like you, which I've experienced
with clients, is you end up injuring yourself, which is actually quite common, and that
really sets you back.
Your pelvic floor muscles,
you will probably have some stuff coming on there
at the very least, some disconnection
with some of your pelvic floor, especially if you deliver,
the babies, even if you don't,
there's gonna be some stuff going on.
You're not connected to your core muscles.
They all have to stretch.
You can't fire them as well.
In fact, after you have the baby, when you go to do anything with your core, it's all hip to stretch. You can't fire them as well. In fact, after you have the baby,
when you go to do anything with your core,
it's all hip flexors.
You're gonna feel like there's no core stability whatsoever.
The relax in a hormone that, or chemical that's released
during pregnancy, that loosens your body up.
When you have twins, there's more of that.
And so you're gonna be a bit hyper-mobile,
meaning you're lacking some stability.
So going slow is the name of the game. And if you
push yourself too hard with lack of stability, pelvic floor muscles not being connected or possibly
injured, which is quite common with core weakness, you can run into some problems that then become
long-term chronic problems. And it's not uncommon to get a female client who used to be an athlete
and then they had a baby and then they tried to work out
on their own, then they'd come hire me and they'd say
something like, you know, after I had my son six years ago,
I've had this chronic back pain or this chronic hip pain.
And then it's like backtracking is very, very difficult.
So go very slow, take your time, you've got great muscle
memory, that's gonna work on your side.
It's gonna take about three to five months for you to start to feel like your body is what it used to be or even
assembling of it. So take your time. Map starter, perfect program, and again, if you're listening and
you don't know what map starter is, it's a lot of unilateral exercises, a lot of stability,
and it's using a physio ball through a lot of the exercises. Perfect. Thank you guys so much. I appreciate it.
No problem, Kenzie. And we're going to send you map starter
if you don't have it, okay?
Oh, thank you. Thank you very much.
No problem. I appreciate the sport.
Yeah, there was a period of time where this was like,
I had a lot of clients that I trained that were either pregnant,
going to get pregnant or just out of baby,
because I trained, you know, I had a studio for over 15 years
and I trained one woman and then she was a part
of like a mom's group.
So I just started getting all these moms.
All moms.
And the challenges with pregnancy and post pregnancy
are unique.
They're very unique to anybody else.
And it's literally like your core post, you know,
post, you don't, it's like you don't,
it's imagine having to trying to get a muscle to contract
and you don't even know how anymore.
That's literally what it, what it feels like.
That's a body experience for sure.
Yeah, so you gotta take your time and go slow,
but I can't stress this enough.
And Jessica's experience is right now.
She's obviously my wife, my son now is five, slow, but I can't stress this enough. And Jessica's experience is right now.
She's obviously my wife, my son now is five,
little over five months old, and I just did
some body fat caliper test on her.
And she's down to 22% and she's just getting leaner.
And she's like, what's going on?
I'm like, she's like, I'm not even working out that much.
I'm only working out two or three metabolism.
Yeah, she's only working out a couple days a week.
That's the same thing.
Yeah, she's working out a couple days a week
because the baby's barely sleeping, so she has to focus on sleep. It's like, why is she's only working out a couple days a week. She's working out a couple days a week, because the baby's barely sleeping,
so she has to focus on sleep.
It's like, why is she's like, this is weird.
I'm like, honey, you were so consistent
with resistance training before the baby,
and during your pregnancy, that you set yourself up really well.
Well, that's the thing.
Yeah, if you have all that going into pregnancy,
it makes it so much easier to rebound.
And then also too, it was crazy. When Courtney was breastfeeding,
it was like all of a sudden,
it was like this fat burning machine turned on.
And so that's another benefit to it.
Even though it's very difficult, it's a struggle,
things like that, that your body will provide.
It's pretty interesting.
Yeah, I would love to see her,
not only do starter,
but I would love to see her follow follow the maps prime pro webinar that I
did. That is something that I would ask her to do too. I think just that'll help get
her reconnected to everything. You got to kind of piece it back together. Yeah, and it's
something she can do on her living room floor. Do it once a week in there. I think it's
just a great way to get her back on the routine. The thing whenever I hear someone like that,
like right away, I think, oh man, this girl's got competitive background. She's body
building before. Oh yeah, she's going to want to go to the desire. I think, oh man, this girl's got competitive background, she's bodybuilding before.
Oh yeah, she's gonna wanna go to the world.
Yeah, the desire, I mean, it's just like,
it's no different, I mean, it's very different
than obviously my knee surgery, right?
Having a baby is nothing like that,
so I don't wanna fucking get it.
I don't want all the way to,
I know what it's like,
I have a knee belt.
I don't want all the women to crucify me for saying,
I put my knee once.
What I mean is having a competitive mindset to get back
because you know what your body's capable of,
and I can relate to that, right?
I can't relate to having a baby, but I can relate to the thinking that I can do much more.
So my body says I can't, and sure shit, that's exactly re-entered myself, set myself
back six more months, and so, yeah, taking it slow, listening to your body is crucial.
Truth be told, some of the most challenging clients
have ever trained in my entire life were ex-athletes.
Oh yeah, they're so far.
They're dumb.
You gotta slow them down.
They're stubborn too.
They don't get it, you know what I mean?
Cause they have the, they just remember
how their body used to be.
And it's like, not the same dude.
Yeah.
Our next caller is Sam from Saudi Arabia.
Oh cool, from Saudi Arabia.
How you doing Sam?
How can we help you?
Hi, how are you?
Thank you for having me.
No problem.
What's your question?
So we started the month of Ramadan today
where we fast the during the day and we eat during night.
So my plan is to have a lifting for,
yeah, and for three weeks during the day. I don't want to have a lifting during
the eating window. So my plan is to work out for 30 minutes of heavy of free weights for 30 minutes,
maximum. So I want to ask you about the nutrition that I should take during the eating window.
What should I eat?
Any more carbs, more protein, fats?
Okay, that's actually a great question.
So many people practice this.
I don't think he's going to like your answer, though, right?
I think I know where you're going to go.
Well, yeah, a lot of people practice this.
And number one, I appreciate this practice.
I think spiritual practices and spiritual health
is very important.
As far as your question is concerned,
you know, what you would eat during your eating window
would be really no different than what you would eat.
That would be considered healthy for your body
if you were to eat all day long.
Now, first and foremost, training fasted, totally fine.
Not eating right after your workout.
Nothing really wrong with that.
If you have a big issue with that,
I would recommend then working out right before your eating window.
As far as diet is concerned,
now I've trained clients who practice Ramadan.
And there's a couple common things that I've run into with some of these clients,
not all of them, but a few of them, where they do the fasting window, right?
But as soon as the sun goes down and then they can eat, they end up overeating, they end
up binging, right?
So it ends up becoming a fast and then feast kind of mentality.
So my recommendation revolves around kind of, slowing down that initial feeding process.
So when you're ready to eat,
maybe eat a healthy meal,
give yourself something a little bit of structure.
So the first meal you eat is more of a structured meal,
then wait 30 minutes to an hour,
and then go and continue to eat.
I would prioritize whole natural foods, proteins and fats.
I would leave carbohydrates towards the end just again,
in my experience, that tends to reduce overeating vegetables.
Also, you could start your meals with vegetables.
So kind of prioritize the more important food first.
Allow yourself to eat into your satisfied,
but be careful to eat past the point of satisfaction.
I'm going to add a little bit to this.
First, I just really think that when we're doing a practice
like this, I think that the main goal
is the spiritual side of this, right?
Like, and the truth is, and I've got this question a lot
of advanced for this many, many times.
And the normal, the concern from the person that's asking it
is that they don't wanna lose their gains, right?
They've been training for a while,
and they're like, okay, Ramadan is here.
I don't want to have 14 days where I slide way back.
And the truth is, you're not,
if, especially if you're training during this time, right?
If you continue to lift, the setback that you may have
in these two weeks is going to be minimal,
and your body will respond
and rebound right away.
So the first thing I would say is I wouldn't get that hung up on this when the real idea
and objective of doing Ramadan is the spiritual practice of that, right, and to be working
inward.
And that is a part of health, and that's going to only benefit you getting stronger and
being better in life.
So, I would tell you to do that first.
And then really, if you're asking more specific about food, more towards sales advice, I would really just target my proteins fats and then lots of veggies.
Like, that's, I would make sure that when I look at my plate, a food, I'm getting a high amount of protein because I didn't eat all day long,
so I'm probably eating a big old piece of meat, having a bunch of vegetables, and then after that,
I would have some carbohydrates like cells saying. So that would be like my main focus. But again,
if you're training during this time, you're already going to be sitting a signal of the body to
hang on to whatever muscle you have. The main focus would be the spiritual practice for me.
I don't do enough of that.
I don't do enough of stopping my life and becoming present and working inward.
That's why I love this practice.
I love that you guys schedule the 14 days every year like this.
I think that this is a great opportunity for you to focus on that stuff.
And don't worry if you're training.
You're gonna be okay and you're gonna come right out of it
when you get done.
Now I do wanna add, of course,
your training probably should be a little bit,
it should be easier.
Less intensity slower because you're not eating or drinking.
And so having someone train really hard without food
but especially without fluids or water
can cause some problems. So really train very easy, mind out your body is personally, again, in my
experience, clients have either had success training first thing when they wake up, or right before
they go and feast, but either way, you still have to be very careful,
especially because you're not drinking fluids.
That's the big thing I would say be careful for.
Does that answer your question?
All right, thank you.
Thank you guys.
Thank you for having me.
No problem.
Yeah, this is...
Thank you.
It's practiced by, I think, something like one and a half billion people worldwide.
Wow, that many.
A huge amount of people practice this.
And run the, so it's, it's 30 days long.
They can't eat all day until nighttime.
Sunrise and sunset.
I don't know how long it is if it's 30 days or I think you might be right.
I can, I can, yeah, he was asking about 14 days, but I believe it's 30 days, right, Doug?
It started on the 14th, I believe, of April.
Okay.
Maybe that's why I missed out on the food.
Yeah, it's a whole month.
It goes through, I think, May 13th.
Yeah, so, and it's no food, no drink.
It's basically your abstaining from pleasurable things,
no sex, no food, no drink.
You're supposed to pray a lot during the day.
I thought it wasn't part of the practice.
They choose something they want to give up.
Isn't that part of it?
I don't know if they had anything to do with that.
But those are different.
Maybe that's when I'm getting that.
Yeah, that's different.
Yeah, this is Islam.
And this is, again, no food, no drink, no sex.
And it's sunrise to sunset.
Yeah, so now do a lot of people actually do, obviously,
it's nighttime that's going to be the focus.
But do people wake up earlier,
so where it's still dark, where they can eat in the morning?
I've had clients that'll do that as well.
So they'll start the day before the sun, right?
But the big challenge I've seen is the,
when you get to the point where the sun goes down,
that's right, then the sun goes down
and then it's like, I'm gonna eat all kinds of things.
And that's the truth is,
and your answer with the eat, how you normally would eat.
I know exactly where his head is at.
It is always the, I don't wanna lose my game's muscle.
I wanna, or I wanna build during this process still.
And it's like really the 30 days of low calorie
is not gonna do anything, but probably lean you out
and probably be good for your body.
So do it, especially if he's still continuing training,
he is not going to regress as much.
You might see a little bit of a strength loss,
you might lose a little tiny bit of muscle,
but not a total different shift of focus.
And I think that you just have to embrace it.
And that's hard to do because you're so focused
on trying to transform your body and build muscle and all that,
you just got to shift your face.
I'll be honest with you, if somebody was otherwise
very consistent, so let's say 11 months out of the air,
they're very consistent with their diet,
with their training, they're asleep.
I think it's great to sleep.
I honestly think that's-
It's no training, no nothing.
I think a 30 day break,
completely.
I agree.
I agree.
Easy movement, maybe focus on mobility.
If anything, they'll probably get better results.
Now, I'm careful when I say this,
I don't want people to do this for this reason.
I think the reason should be for the spiritual gains
that you get from it.
Not the physical gains,
but I think the side effect of this honestly
would be better physical,
I think a deload month,
you're focusing on other things,
you're focusing on maybe on mobility,
but really it's a spiritual and you're taking a break.
This is like one of those practices
that has stood the test of time.
Like in a lot of religions, they do,
they do these things for a reason because it does benefit your,
your overall health.
That's right.
Our next caller is Maria from California.
Hey, Maria, how can we help you?
Hey guys, I want to start off saying thank you for taking my question and for this
podcast, you guys put out so much good information.
Thank you.
So my question is what program can I follow to complement my Olympic lifting training?
For context, I have been Olympic lifting inconsistently for two years now and
have decided to perfect my technique and build strength, strength in my snatch and
clean and jerk this year. My clean
and jerk have been progressing nicely, but I have a hard time going up and weight with my snatch
and because of my weak core and my upper body and more specifically in the receiving position of
the snatch. When I start the movement, my core is engaged, I'm doing good, but as soon as I do the
second pull into the receiving position, my core is not engaged. My arms get wobbly and I miss the lift. So what program can I follow
to help build up my core and upper body for a fast movement like the snatch?
Oh, okay. So yeah, great detail. That really helps a lot. So, okay. So there's a couple
of things going on here in my opinion. Now you're talking about any specific position
things going on here in my opinion. Now you're talking about any specific position with a specific movement, you feel like your core turns off. Now, real, this may be a simple answer,
in the sense where I would put you in that position with weight, not the weight that you work out
with, but lighter weight. So get in that receiving position. You're going that overhead squat.
Specifically. There you go. Get in that receiving position, hold some weight, and practice
Yeah, specifically there you go get in that receiving position hold some weight and practice
Bracing your core the goal is to activate the core and hold it for
10 15 seconds because what it sounds like is it doesn't necessarily it sounds like you're having trouble connecting
At specific portions of the movement. So we want to do is focus specifically on those portions of the movement
While connecting with an isometric hole to start with, and then maybe some overhead squats like Justin was talking about.
Now as far as program is concerned, Maps Prime is going to help you the most with some
of this kind of stuff.
But specifically speaking, get in that position where you feel like your core is turned off,
go lighter, hold that position, and then your goal is to turn those muscles on and see if you can hold and brace
While in that position that you normally feel things turn on. Oh, this reminds me a lot of like the we get probably every week
I think at least one question is like a sports specific type of question, right?
This is very similar Olympic lifting is is a sport. And so nothing is
going to get you better at performing the movements in the sport than actually doing the sport
itself, right? So practicing those movements, there's things that can complement, like I
think you guys both just alluded to, but as much as I would like to tell you to go run
out and get maps and a ball, like in performance and aesthetic, and oh, use that with these
programs, and not that they wouldn't complement or help what you're doing.
But I also would not want it to take away from your time of practicing these moves.
That's the thing that's going to get you better than anything else.
Yeah, I love all that, especially isometrics.
I think that it's so underutilized by athletes, too.
And that's why I'm always trying to bring it up.
We mentioned Prime Pro, it does have isometric movements in there, but it's one of those
like real safe ways to really ramp up max intensity
and be able to really get that central nervous system
response without a lot of damage.
And so I think that there's a big opportunity there,
especially if there's a disconnect anywhere
in that chain while you're performing
these really high skilled movements to slow
down, stop, and wherever that discrepancy lies, let's really dig into that.
Let's find where that is and start to ramp that process up.
So Justin, since it's in the catch position for her, are you alluding to her getting in
that catch position and then creating an isomac detention?
Yeah, absolutely.
What would that look like?
So even if you have like a dowel bar
and you're emulating it as a barbell
and I'm getting into that position,
I'm going down in that position,
now I'm pulling outward,
I'm getting more attention in the grip,
I'm getting that through,
all the way through my arms in the full lockout position,
I'm squeezing, I'm trying to connect to my core,
I'm getting my hips involved, my glutes, everything else.
And just really focusing on a five to even 15 second,
just max squeeze effort, and that's one wrap.
Yeah, I mean, just to put it very plainly,
if there's any portion of a lift,
if you feel a disconnect at the bottom of the lift
and the middle at the top, what you can do is just practice that portion of the lift
with an isometric connection.
So get in that bottom position and see if you can turn
your core on and then when you can,
see if you can turn it on even more
and get it tighter and tighter.
Once you feel like you can turn it on it will,
then you can start to load it slowly over time.
And then when that feels like you've got the hang of it,
then you go back into your full movement.
I could also see some value in doing like,
because it's in the front rack position,
if I heard that correctly, right?
It's a front rack position when she gets down is an ash.
No, snatch overhead.
Oh, is that right?
Make sure I'm clear on this before.
Maria, is it? She should.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, it's in the full snatch.
So the bars above your head and you're in a full squat. Oh, so's in the full snatch. So you're the bars above your head
and you're in a full squat.
Oh, so when you catch up, okay.
So yeah, I think actually doing that with lightweight
and doing that full range like really slow and controlled,
like tempo.
And doing like tempo squats,
I know Olympic lifting is more explosive
and so you're normally doing everything fast,
but to train the core and better connection,
I would actually do like tempo squats with it overhead.
Yeah, and you know what's happening here is to get into position,
which I mean, let's be honest, if you're doing a snatch
and you're up in that position,
there's a lot of technique, skill, and mobility that's involved.
And what's probably happening is you might be lacking
connection or mobility on one part of your body
and you're turning your core off to force your body
to get into position.
So it's hard to guess specifically what the issue is, but if you do an isometric at the
bottom and turn your core on, that's 100% right start.
It may be unexpected too, maybe just, you know, you don't have the right amount of mobility
and stability in your ankle.
And so then now it's affecting you up the chain and, you know, and you're losing that
sort of connection just right in your ankle. And so then I was affecting you up the chain. And you're losing that sort of connection just right in that spot.
So yeah, I would totally go through each checkpoint in terms of your joints and see how they're functioning. One last thing on that Maria, do you follow Sonny Webster?
Yes, I saw all those videos and I've been working on those mobility for like during COVID. And I actually have really good mobility. My coach at the
gym tells me I have the best mobility from anyone he's ever seen. So I don't know if it's
a mobility issue, but he tells me like, oh, it's your week core. And I asked him what to
do. And he's like, oh, do planks. And I'm like, okay, like like plank all day, like,
I don't know. It's a connection issue, meaning in a particular position,
you feel your core turn off.
You could have the strongest plank in the world
and still have the same problem.
Correct, correct.
So you gotta practice this position
and turn your core on in this position.
That's the only thing that's gonna give you
the biggest bang for your buck.
Okay.
All right, thank you for calling.
Thank you so much, bye guys. No problem, all right. Yeah, I love. Thank you so much. Bye, guys.
No problem.
All right.
Yeah, I love the detail in that question.
Oh, yeah.
That's a good question right there.
I mean, so many given you that much detail really helps kind of get to the bottom.
Yeah.
I would say of the three of us, Justin probably has the best snatch.
What would you say?
Yeah.
I appreciate that.
Yeah.
Yeah, I saw his snatch one.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I was just going to talk about it. Yeah, hold it well.
There was one more thing I wanted to add though,
like it's you talk about playing like,
I do see some value in a holo body position.
Yeah.
And so that's something that like a lot of gymnasts do
to be able to get that kind of connection throughout,
through your limbs, through your entire body all at once.
Well, and the reason for that is because you're like
in that fully extended.
Yeah, you're fully extended.
Yeah, so if I was a coach,
I'd probably have our arms in that wide position too,
and then try to transfer all of that force through
the entire body.
And that's really what it is.
You want to emulate that movement.
Yeah, I mean, it goes back to what I was talking about
with we get athletes all the time, right?
I'm a basketball player.
I want to get in my verte,
but then I want to also do all these other things.
It's like anything that takes away from you playing basketball
is gonna make you not as good as playing basketball.
The thing goes for Olympic football.
The giveaway for me was when she said,
it feels strong at other times.
It just turns off at the bottom position.
Because that happens.
That's right.
So it's like, okay, focus on that position.
Our next caller is Dan from Australia.
Dan, how's it going, man?
Thanks for calling.
How can we help you? Hey boys, thanks for taking my call.
My question is, it's double-barrelled.
Basically, training in nutrition with a young family, so I'm 39 this year.
I'm in pretty decent shape, but I followed Annabolly kinesthetic previously.
I've dabbled in a little bit of split, but not really for me.
I like the full body stuff.
And I guess, you know, thinking about training, where to next, after following things like
that, I tend to go back and forth.
The other one, and it's probably more important to me,
is the nutrition and how I can take better control
of my diet, particularly with a young family
and a fairly busy job as a middle management teacher,
like an assistant principal.
I really don't deprive myself,
and I think I resonate with that and with the sugar battle.
And, although I train regularly in run. I just carry that extra body weight that I just feel like is just grown over time.
All right.
So the question is, essentially, how to kind of get a little bit of a better handle over
your diet and in particular sugar type foods.
Now some of the best strategies that I've ever found
to work with clients in this regard
is the simple practice of putting barriers
in between you and the types of foods
that you tend to find that trigger you.
These are like trigger foods for you, right?
So for you it's sugar for someone else
that might be a salty type of snack like a potato chip.
So that's for me, right?
Potato chips for me, that can be a problem.
If they're in the house, it's just this,
it's in back of my mind and it's this struggle
and I find myself heading over to the pantry
and having chips every other hour or whatever.
So put some barriers between you and these foods.
So step number one, don't have them in the house.
But don't tell yourself you can't have them. So what I mean by that is you don't have them in the house,
but if you really want it, then you'll go and buy yourself a single serving of whatever you want.
So if you want candy, you go to the store, don't get the big bag of candy,
you get the one single serving of candy.
Now, what that barrier is going to do
is it gives you enough time to pause
and kind of think about what you're doing
because trigger foods tend to create
this kind of impulsive action, right, where you grab it,
you eat it, and you're not really thinking about it.
Telling yourself that you can have it,
but you got to drive all the way to the store to get it,
might give you, and it usually works, gives you enough time to actually say to yourself
Do I really want that maybe I should have something else instead?
And more often than not or at least more often than now you'll find yourself not
You know engaging that behavior. I have two questions to kind of ask in terms of like, Ed, are you getting a good amount of sleep?
Like do you feel like you're tired throughout the day?
Generally, yeah, even though I sleep pretty well.
Yeah.
Today might be a battle, being 3.30 AM down here.
I mean, the land of us, but yeah,
generally I feel all right.
Yeah, I really resonate with that if it's mindless.
Yeah, I'm just asking because too, I noticed when I was really,
you know, lacking sleep and having kids
and I was a lot more prone to a lot of those types of foods
and that kind of found its way into my diet.
I had cravings.
So that was something that I had to look into further how I could improve my quality of
sleep.
So about four years ago, I don't know if you've been listening that long, Dan or not,
but four years ago, the ketogenic diet was getting really popular.
And right at that time, I was just coming out of the peak of bodybuilding and loving the fact that I could, I was a monster.
I was 235 pounds, I was lean, I could eat about 400 to 500 grams of carbohydrates every day,
which allowed me to keep my sweets and things in there and still look alright.
And I remember all of us talking about it, we all talked off air and I think Sal was
the first one to say,
I think I'm gonna run this ketogenic diet for a while.
And I was like, why the fuck would I do that?
I was like, I love the amount of carbs I can consume
and get away with.
I don't wanna do something like that.
Well, the self-awareness that I have,
I caught myself saying that,
I was like, okay, well, that's the exact reason why I should do it
is because I don't wanna do it.
And let's see how my body will react and respond to it.
So I did. And one of the things that came out of that
more than anything else,
one, I'm not a fan of running the ketogenic diet
for a long period of time
because I think it just limits the amount of food choices
that you have.
I got really tired of macadamia nuts, avocado,
and just meat and butter, right?
It just got really lame for a diet.
But what happened because that is a, you know,
essentially no carb diet, my body got really used
to eating higher amounts of fats.
And I had never in my life up into that point
had a macro profile like that where it was really high fat
and then moderate protein and then minimal carbohydrates.
And it actually changed the way that I craved carbohydrates.
And what I found was I didn't have the sweet cravings
that I used to have all the time while I was on that diet.
Now when I decided to come out of that diet
and I was no longer running ketogenic,
what I noticed was as long as I kept my macro profile
with this kind of higher fat and targeting protein first,
and then carbohydrates become kind of an afterthought for me.
It really minimized the cravings.
And today, that's really how I eat.
I eat this higher fat and protein type of diet.
I still eat carbohydrates,
but now my carbohydrate ticket is like 150 to 200 grams,
which is significantly lower than what I was.
And I notice that it keeps the cravings down.
Now, are there times when I eat it well above that?
Yeah, and there's times when I do that.
And a lot of times it's like, we're just in a little too with the sleep.
I find myself craving those things.
And then I allow more carbs in.
And when I notice it's like this vicious cycle, if I allow the additional carbs, it kicks
up that appetite in the cravings.
And then I want the sweets again.
So one of the things that helped me out, and I don't know if you've ever tried that or not,
but maybe change your macro profile to where you're eating higher fats, proteins, and then really
minimize the type of amount of carbohydrates and see if that changes your cravings.
Yeah, excellent. Awesome.
All right, Dan. And also Alright Dan, and also Dan.
You said you're followed anabolic aesthetic,
and I know you're calling from Australia,
so it's like you said 3.30 in the morning,
you got two small kids.
I'd like to give you a free program, okay?
So pick a program and we'll send it to you for free.
It's a legend.
Yeah, let us know which one do you want.
Tell us right now so Doug can send that over to you
Let's get strong all right. Yeah good choice strong come in your way. Thanks for calling
Cheese boys. Thanks no problem Man father or two calls it 3 30 what a sad I know
I love the guy we have you know we have a huge audience in Australia and I think every single one I've met
It's our it's you know what it is.
It's our sarcasm.
It's our sarcasm.
I think they get us.
I think they definitely get us.
We're a little inappropriate for California.
Maybe.
Maybe.
We're a rare breed for here.
Yeah.
I think we have less California people that listen to.
We'll understand that's an Earth state.
Yeah.
But I tell you what, man, this is just, if you put those barriers between you and that food,
but don't tell yourself you can't have it,
you'll find that you'll start to pause,
and you'll start to, your behaviors will start to change,
because look, I'm in the fitness space,
this is what I do for a living.
If I have potato chips in the house,
it's like either I eat them or I don't,
and it's this constant battle.
I don't wanna live like that, just don't have them in the house.
So then if I really want them, I'll get in the car and go drive and it's this constant battle. I don't wanna live like that, just don't have them in the house. So then if I really want them,
I'll get in the car and go driving
and get myself a small back.
You know how many times I do that?
Almost never, because it's almost never worth it
for me to get in the car driving the story and convenient.
That's right.
Well, to me, that's the kind of the first step, right?
I mean, that's the, to me, that's a no brainer.
Like if you're, it's like being a recovering alcoholic
and hanging out in bars all the time.
It's like, probably not a good idea.
Yeah, and maybe there's people that do that.
I've heard of bartenders that are recovering
alcoholics and they're fine with that.
Maybe that small percentage of people are fine.
Not a good strategy for somebody who struggles
with those types of cravings.
But it's been a while since we brought something like this up
and talked about this.
I haven't shared this on the podcast in a long time,
but that was our game changer for me. When we went to the ketoper, yeah, that's right.
Switch, thank you Justin. No problem. That was, when I went through the ketogenic diet,
as much as I didn't like it, because of what it limited my choices of food,
what I did love from it is it forever changed my relationship with carbohydrates.
I have not gone back to anywhere near
what I was eating before,
and I've noticed that I don't have the same type of cravings.
And now I can have ice cream chips
or things like that in my house,
and I don't feel the same urge as I had before.
Unless I allow myself to go down that path.
And just like I said, where I start consuming it all the time,
but I brought up a month ago where I told you guys,
remember I ordered that cookie,
that cookie plus cake.
So that's cream pie.
So that's still in my freezer.
Five years ago, that would have never happened.
How much of his left in here?
Yeah, like a third of it still.
Oh wow.
Yeah, yeah.
That much.
So you have a third of that delicious cookie pie.
Just like a spoon of it every now and then.
No, I mean, I was, you know, maybe, Mabel, you're talking about it watching me. I know, right? yeah cookie pie. Yeah, like a spoon of it every now and then. No, I mean, I was you know
Maybe I'm talking about a watching you. I know right?
I forgot I did kind of forget about you just remember. I did kind of forget about tonight. I'm having it No, I really though
I think a lot of it has to do with the rest of the day when I was eating a lot of carbs where I was I mean before I used to try
It happens to me when I eat carbs. I want more of them. Yes
Whenever reason yes, it kicks that craving up where when I fill up
on the fats and proteins, I don't seem to crave it.
I agree.
Look, if you like MindPumps content,
you gotta head over to MindPumpFree.com.
We have a lot of free guides and written information
that'll help you reach your fitness goals.
Again, it's MindPumpFree.com.
You can also find all of us on Instagram.
So you can find me at MindPumps.al,
add them at MindPump.atom find me at Mind Pump Sal, Adam at
Mind Pump Adam and Justin at Mind Pump Just.
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